The corpus I chose for my Computational Musicology portfolio is a selection of remixes of (pop) songs that I like. I’ve been maintaining a Spotify playlist, that now has around 75 remixed recordings, since last year. I started maintaining this playlist for myself because there are generally a lot of remixes for artists that I follow, but I was unfamiliar with most. Listening to a lot of remixes and collecting those that I like was an interesting musical journey.
It’d be interesting to find out if there’s some general elements shared among the remixed recordings that I like. Comparing the remixes to the original recordings can also be interesting, for sure the tempo would probably be higher for the remixes. The definition of a remix is sometimes confusing, but the ones on my playlist are either extended remixes by the original artists or a remix where a significant amount of production on the song has been altered from the original. Remixes where the only difference is a new guest artists are not included on the playlist.
The corpus is a personal playlist, artists on the playlist include Lady Gaga, Dua Lipa and Charli XCX, among others. Most of my music consumption takes place on Spotify, sometimes I watch a music video or performance on YouTube, or listen to one of the 40 albums I have collected on vinyl. Since the corpus is my personal playlist, it doesn’t fully cover the pop remixes genre, and there aren’t that many remixes of top 10 hits included.
Typical tracks:
Atypical tracks:
Tracks are remixed for a large amount of reasons, an important one being: the dancefloor. This means there is probably some change in tempo.
As can be seen in the violin plot, for original recordings, the tempo for most tracks lies between 100-140 bpm, with a peak around 120 bpm. The tempo for the remixed tracks are for more dense, with a peak just slightly higher than 120 bpm.
Since the difference in tempo was obvious, let’s take a look at two additional metrics from the Spotify API, energy and danceability.
Seems like some remixes from my playlist make the original songs less danceable. It’s also fairly visible that most original recorings were already quite high in both energy and danceability, with almost all tracks being in the upper right quadrant. In general, the remixes do seem to have more energy. That doesn’t always make them more danceable, since quite a few more remixes are below 0.5 in danceability. Most less-danceable tracks seem to have a bpm higher than 120.
It looks like energy can be quite different in remixes, so let’s look at the top 10 remixes that changed up the energy a lot.
| Remix | Energy | Change in energy from original | Change in duration (seconds) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walking Away - Mura Masa Remix | 0.528 | -0.003 | 51.299 |
| Circus - Villains Remix | 0.739 | 0.006 | 125.200 |
| Simmer - Caroline Polachek Remix | 0.606 | 0.007 | -69.165 |
| You And I - SAINT WKND Remix | 0.793 | 0.007 | 14.937 |
| Flames - Extended | 0.717 | -0.009 | 96.702 |
| Better When You’re Gone - Extended Mix | 0.809 | 0.014 | 146.992 |
| OctaHate - Cashmere Cat Remix | 0.687 | 0.015 | 57.600 |
| Focus - Yaeji Remix | 0.614 | 0.016 | -4.187 |
| Don’t Start Now - Live in LA Remix | 0.810 | 0.017 | 156.785 |
| Toxic - Bloodshy & Avant’s Intoxicated Remix - 2009 Remaster | 0.855 | 0.017 | 136.400 |
Those remixes are really quite different! But which remixes do barely change in energy?
The top 10 least changed remixes in terms of Spotify determined energy include several extended versions of songs (Circus, Flames, Better When You’re Gone, Don’t Start Now, and Toxic), it makes sense that an extended version of a song is not drastically different from the original.
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